Washington Post Throws Snowden Under the Bus

Although The Washington Post shared a Pulitzer prize with the Guardian for its reporting on the NSA leaks provided by Edward Snowden, yesterday its editorial board became the first to call for the prosecution of its own source.

A joint op-ed from the Post’s editorial board comes at a moment when activists are in the midst of a concerted campaign to lobby President Obama to pardon Snowden. It makes sense that the Post would take this moment to give an official opinion about whether Snowden is a criminal. What’s baffling is that the newspaper seems to imply that no public interest was served by any of the leaks except for one — one they aren’t responsible for revealing.

Outlets like thee Guardian, The New York Times and The Intercepthave all weighed in and said that Snowden is a whistleblower who did a service for the public. But The Washington Post’s position is that only the leaks that related to the NSA’s collection of cellphone metadata were justified.

Regarding that metadata case, the editors say:

The program was a stretch, if not an outright violation, of federal surveillance law, and posed risks to privacy. Congress and the president eventually responded with corrective legislation. It’s fair to say we owe these necessary reforms to Mr. Snowden.

Those specific revelations were revealed by the Guardian, the publication that shared the Pulitzer with The Post in 2014.

The rest of the op-ed outlines the ways in which Snowden’s actions were not justifiable and points to stories that were made public by the very paper that these critical words were printed in.

It was The Washington Post that chose to print the details of the secret PRISM program. This is what they have to say now:

The complication is that Mr. Snowden did more than that. He also pilfered, and leaked, information about a separate overseas NSA Internet-monitoring program, PRISM, that was both clearly legal and not clearly threatening to privacy. (It was also not permanent; the law authorizing it expires next year.)

If the legality was so clear and the lack of threat to privacy was also readily apparent, why did The Washington Post publish its report? And then why did it seek the Pulitzer prize? And why is this op-ed so lacking in self-criticism?

It probably won’t surprise you that Glenn Greenwald, one of the journalists responsible for publishing the Snowden leaks, has a detailed takedown of The Post’s odd position and reasoning. It’s well worth a read.

A question remains: Why did staff members of The Washington Post print the leaks that they don’t believe the public needed to know about?